Sen. Murray leads charge to help unemployed veterans
Unemployment among young veterans is much higher than the national jobless rate. Washington Sen. Patty Murray proposes education, training and help shifting military skills to civilian jobs.
WITH unemployment among young military veterans soaring, Sen. Patty Murray is stepping forward with promising legislation to help a group that has proudly served its country.
The Washington Democrat offers timely support for young veterans struggling to find civilian jobs, including directing the Small Business Administration to help veterans start their own businesses and translate their military skills into compelling resumes for the workplace.
The senior member of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee also rightly wants to incorporate job-training programs, online classes and apprenticeships into the GI Bill. Good move. The massive program launched to support returning World War II veterans could use an update to address the needs of today's veterans. -->-->-->
One wonders, at least this one, why there isn't any reports, they were scarce before, on the National Guard Soldiers who are still being called to national service and duty in the theaters as to the jobs they lost, and were supposed to be saved until they return but aren't in this economy or for other reasons, or the ones who's businesses have collapsed because of serving their country!
For the Battle-Scarred, Comfort at Leash’s End
The dogs learn to fetch, turn lights on and off and even dial 911.
Just weeks after Chris Goehner, 25, an Iraq war veteran, got a dog, he was able to cut in half the dose of anxiety and sleep medications he took for post-traumatic stress disorder. The night terrors and suicidal thoughts that kept him awake for days on end ceased.
Aaron Ellis, 29, another Iraq veteran with the stress disorder, scrapped his medications entirely soon after getting a dog — and set foot in a grocery store for the first time in three years. -->-->-->
Veterans group pushes Congress to give unemployed vets a hand
A veterans advocacy organization is raising the alarm about staggering unemployment rates among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans and is pressing Congress for help.
The Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America estimates that unemployment rate of new veterans is 14.7 percent, much higher than the overall 9.7 percent announced Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. -->-->-->
Dogs may help ease veterans' pain
The federal government is spending several million dollars to study whether scientific research supports anecdotal reports that service dogs might speed veterans' recovery from the psychological wounds of wars. Under a bill written by Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., veterans with PTSD will get service dogs as part of a pilot program run by the Department of Veterans Affairs. -->-->-->
If only the country, and for that matter the world communities, had paid attention during the last some four decades, all they needed do was listen to learn, we would have been greatly advanced not only as to Combat PTSD in the Soldier and those Occupied but also understanding the trauma and results of that develops same in individuals in the greater civilian ranks!







The dogs learn to fetch, turn lights on and off and even dial 911.







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